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Stephen King, Pentti Isomursu: Hohto (Paperback, Finnish language, 2013, WSOY)

Paperback, 662 pages

Finnish language

Published Nov. 30, 2013 by WSOY.

ISBN:
978-951-0-40336-5
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3 stars (3 reviews)

Danny on vain 5-vuotias pikkupoika, mutta hän hohtaa: hän pystyy ottamaa suoran yhteyden henkilöön joka on satojen kilometrien päässä, hän pystyy saamaan selville menneet tapahtumat ja näkemään tulevaisuuteen. Kun Dannyn isästä Jack Torrancesta tulee komealla näköalapaikalla sijaitsevan vuoristohotellin hoitaja, Dannyn näyt muuttuvat pelottaviksi. Hohto on luisumassa hänen hallinnastaan. Talvella lumivyöryt eristävät hotellin muusta maailmasta. Silloin tyhjillään oleva rakennus alkaa elää omaa elämäänsä. Kuka on nainen huoneessa 217? Keitä ovat hissillä kulkevat naamioidut vieraat? Hotellissa asuu paha voima ja sekin hohtaa.

13 editions

All work and no play makes Matty go....

4 stars

So I've been a big fan of the shining movie and wanted to see how the book told the story cause I heard that a) Stephen King didn't like the movie b) the story was different.

So considering that I felt like I was reading a story I really enjoyed specifically to appreciate the differences. At points it felt like a slog, with date rusty and clumsy politics and such. But some of the differences I really appreciated about the book included the greater sympathetic lens we view jack Torrence through, his suicidal tendencies, struggles with alcohol, and love for danny cast him in a much more sympathetic light, which makes his descent into unhinged murderous rage much more disturbing and tragic.

The shining and magic of the world is also much more prevalent and explored and even the jump scares and horrors focus on hornets, hedges, anthropomorphic ghouls, and …

reviewed The Shining by Stephen King (The Shining, #1)

This Little Light of Mine

4 stars

A great book whose brilliance, as so many of King's novels, lies in its exploration of the complex interplay between the supernatural and the psychological.

The Overlook's evil influence is both tangible and intangible, blurring the lines between reality and hallucination. Jack's descent into madness, fueled by alcoholism, repressed anger, and the hotel's sinister influence, is both terrifying and relatable, as we witness the gradual unraveling of a man teetering on the brink of insanity.

And the ending is terrific.

Subjects

  • alcoholism
  • violence